Trickle-Down Economics, Merit, and Redistribution: An Experiment with the Poorest and Richest US Americans
Roberto Brunetti (),
Gianluca Grimalda () and
Maria Marino ()
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Roberto Brunetti: GATE CNRS, France; Universitè Lumiére Lyon 2, France; Université Jean-Monnet Saint-Etienne, France; Emlyon Business School, France.
Gianluca Grimalda: Passau University, Germany.
Maria Marino: Universitat de Barcelona, Spain.
No 202518, IREA Working Papers from University of Barcelona, Research Institute of Applied Economics
Abstract:
Despite growing income inequality, demand for redistribution has remained stagnant, which is puzzling for the poor. We investigate whether attitudes toward “trickle-down” economics and fairness affect redistribution demand. We involve US residents from the bottom and top 20% of the income distribution (N = 2, 346) in experimental redistributive decisions from high-income real-life entrepreneurs to low-income recipients. We find that entrepreneurs’ activities possibly generating trickle-down effects, such as employing 1,000 workers, are irrelevant to redistribution. Conversely, the desire to sanction the “undeserving poor” and, less importantly, to reward the “deserving rich” significantly affect redistribution. High-income and low-income participants’ decisions follow surprisingly similar patterns.
Keywords: Trickle-down; Fairness; Merit; Redistribution. JEL classification: D72; D91; H2; H23; H41. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 84 pages
Date: 2025-11
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ent, nep-exp and nep-mac
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ira:wpaper:202518
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